Hub/Switch Reference Guide

288 AP Commands
NN47250-100 (Version 02.51)
across the AP radios in the load-balancing group. When low strictness is specified (the default), WSS Software
makes heavily loaded AP radios less visible in order to steer clients to less-busy AP radios, but ensures that
even if all the AP radios in the group are heavily loaded, clients are not denied service.
At the other end of the spectrum, when max strictness is specified, if an AP radio has reached its maximum
client load, WSS Software makes it invisible to new clients, causing them to attempt to connect to other AP
radios. In the event that all the AP radios in the group have reached their maximum client load, then no new
clients would be able to connect to the network.
Examples
The following command sets the RF load balancing strictness to the maximum setting:
WSS# set load-balancing strictness max
Success: strictness set to "MAX"
See Also
set load-balancing mode on page 276
set band-preference on page 275
set ap radio load-balancing group on page 269
show load-balancing group on page 375
set radio-profile 11g-only
Deprecated in WSS Software Version 4.1. To configure radio data rates, see set service-profile transmit-rates on
page 334.
set radio-profile active-scan
Disables or reenables active RF detection scanning on the AP radios managed by a radio profile. When active scanning
is enabled, AP radios look for rogue devices by sending probe any requests (probe requests with a null SSID name), to
solicit probe responses from other access points.
Passive scanning is always enabled and cannot be disabled. During passive scanning, radios look for rogues by listening
for beacons and probe responses.
Syntax
set radio-profile name active-scan {enable | disable}
Defaults
Active scanning is enabled by default.
Access
Enabled.
History
Introduced in WSS Software Version 4.0.
name Radio profile name.
enable Configures radios to actively scan for rogues.
disable Configures radios to scan only passively for rogues by listening for
beacons and probe responses.